Boy Who Received Stem-Cell Trachea Implant Doing Well After Two Years

Born with a restricted trachea, Ciaran Finn-Lynch may have undergone his last surgery, doing well two years after receiving a stem-cell treated trachea.

Just as the Olympic Games are kicking off in London, one boy from the UK is pulling ahead in his race to live a normal, healthy life. Two years after becoming the first child to receive a trachea transplant coated with his own stem cells, 13-year-old Ciaran Finn-Lynch is doing so well that he has finally returned to school.

Ciaran was born with congenital tracheal stenosis, a condition in which a portion of the trachea is narrowed and causes breathing difficulties. Doctors performed an emergency surgery to reconstruct his airways when he was just six days old. Until the age of 11, Ciaran had been treated with a series of metal stints to widen his trachea. But two years ago a stint caused major bleeding, and doctors sought a new option.

Stem cell-treated tracheal implants are still at the cutting edge of medicine. The first person to receive one did so only in 2008. A donor trachea is taken from a cadaver and has its cells stripped. The decellularized trachea serves as a collagen scaffold for the pluripotent stem cells that, in Ciaran’s case, were taken from his bone marrow. Grafts from the original trachea were treated with cytokines and other proteins to induce the stem cells into becoming trachea cells. Replacing the donor trachea’s cells with the patient’s own allows the body to recognize it as its own and not reject it, minimizing the need for immunosuppressive drugs.

But what made Ciaran’s surgery different from the one in 2008 was the fact that the stem cells were added only after the trachea had been implanted. This kind of inside-the-body growth is a big improvement over first growing the cells in the lab. As Martin Birchall, professor of laryngology at the University College of London Ear Institute and part of the transplant team, said in a press release, “We need more research on stem cells grown deliberately inside the body, rather than grown first in a laboratory over a long time. This research should help to convert one-off successes such as this into more widely available clinical treatments for thousands of children with severe tracheal problems worldwide.”

Ciaran’s progress has been documented in a study recently published in The Lancet. One week after the surgery blood vessels had already grown into it, supplying the differentiating stem cells with blood. It took a year, however, for epithelial cell layers to fully develop, and 18 months for the trachea to reach the mechanical stability of normal tracheas. For support in the implant’s early days a biodegradable stint was used. Two years after the surgery tests show that the trachea had gained full function and shows no signs of rejection, and Ciaran is able to breathe well enough to return to school.

In the following video Ciaran’s mother describes how she “thought she’d lost him” when he began bleeding in 2009, but is now very hopeful for the future.

Ciaran, who is from County Down in Northern Ireland, underwent the surgery at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital in 2010. The surgery has since been performed on a second child at the Great Ormond Street Hospital. The surgery was a success, but the child unfortunately passed away at a later date. From the press release, the exact cause of death is unclear.

Due to pioneering centers like the Great Ormond Street Hospital, the number of stem-cell treated tracheal implants will undoubtedly grow in the near future. And the shift from growing the stem cells in a lab to growing them inside the body, as Dr. Birchall mentioned, could not only accelerate that process even further, but refining the technology would most likely benefit other stem cell treatments. Each trachea implant will be a gold medal victory, not only for the patients, but for regenerative medicine as well.

[image credits: Telegraph and ABC News]
images: Telegraph, ABC News
video: UTV

Peter Murray
Peter Murrayhttp://www.amazon.com/Peter-Murray/e/B004J3ONVQ/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
Peter Murray was born in Boston in 1973. He earned a PhD in neuroscience at the University of Maryland, Baltimore studying gene expression in the neocortex. Following his dissertation work he spent three years as a post-doctoral fellow at the same university studying brain mechanisms of pain and motor control. He completed a collection of short stories in 2010 and has been writing for Singularity Hub since March 2011.
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